Advertisement

  Stock Sponsor
Click here for full stock listings


Published: November 30, 2009 3:00 a.m.

Discovery’s ascent an omen for Oprah

Cable faring better than broadcasters

RYAN NAKASHIMA
Associated Press
Thumbnail

Associated Press

Oprah Winfrey announces Nov. 20 “The Oprah Winfrey Show” will end its run in 2011 after 25 seasons on the air.

Advertisement

LOS ANGELES – Oprah Winfrey’s new partner on cable TV is a bit like her: It came from humble beginnings to become a big force in the media business.

After launching in 1985 with 156,000 subscribers, Discovery Communications Inc. now has a global audience of millions and owns several hot cable properties, including Discovery Channel and TLC, home of the tabloid sensation “Jon & Kate Plus 8.”

Its stock has more than doubled since the start of the year, and the company’s market value is nearly $9 billion.

Ratings at its most well-known channels are up, thanks in part to the gossip about Jon and Kate Gosselin and their eight children, whose finale aired last week.

Winfrey’s recent announcement that she is ending her broadcast-syndicated talk show in 2011 capped a long period of speculation that began when she announced the launch of OWN: The Oprah Winfrey Network, in a 50-50 partnership with Discovery in January 2008.

It also marked another victory for cable TV, which has drawn advertisers, audiences and talent away from broadcasters ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox and their TV station affiliates.

One strength of cable network owners such as Discovery is that they generate steady and rising subscription fees from cable and satellite TV providers, which pay to show channels to their subscribers. That has helped cable networks weather the economic downturn far better than broadcasters.

OWN is set to launch in January 2011 in 80 million U.S. homes, replacing Discovery Health. Research firm SNL Kagan estimates the channel generates 12 cents in fees per month per subscriber, but that is expected to rise to 17 cents by 2013 after Winfrey settles in.

The amount Winfrey earned in her broadcast contract, in which CBS Corp. syndicated her show to stations nationwide, was not revealed. But Anthony DiClemente, an analyst at Barclays Capital, said the deal on cable “can provide higher value.”

“I’m sure she has mixed emotions about leaving broadcast for cable. But if you look at it from an economic point of view, the recurring subscription fee which occurs on cable is very alluring for both Oprah and Discovery corporate,” DiClemente said.

Discovery was launched in 1985 by John Hendricks, a history buff who saw value in telecasting enlightening documentaries.

A group of investors that included media mogul John Malone helped get the company off the ground, literally, with its first subscribers getting the feed via satellite.

The new venture fit perfectly for both Winfrey and Discovery.

A couple of years ago, when CEO David Zaslav was looking for ideas on what to do with Discovery Health, one of the company’s least successful channels, his wife decided to hand him a copy of O, The Oprah Magazine.

He approached Winfrey about a partnership.

As it happened, she had recently come upon an entry in her diary dated May 24, 1992, when she wrote about her idea for creating her own network.

“David came and really spoke about the vision I’d been having for 15 years,” she said last year. “It felt like, ‘I can’t believe you’re saying this.’ ”

There’s no doubt that Winfrey’s average audience, more than 7 million this fall, will be a boost to Discovery Health, which had an average prime-time audience of just 238,000 in the third quarter.